Had a look at the Minister for Nobbling Telecommunications, Mr Malcolm Turncoat lately? He has aged hugely in the last couple of years. Wonder if that is due to his killing the NBN and replacing it with a mishmash of FTTB/FTTN/HFC that is unable to boost the economy? FTTH can. Stands to reason. If we are living in the Information Age then it is obvious that being able to get information to where it is needed quickly and reliably would be a good thing. That is what FTTH would have done. The MTM mishmash can increase speeds a bit tho some will suffer a fall in speed due to the nature of VDSLx but it will not be a game changing exercise anymore. Does it make sense to buy the copper to run FTTN over it? Doesn’t look like it to me!

Going to be hard for the 2016 Labor govt to roll out FTTH after all the crap the Libs pulled. But FTTDp offers a way to get it done cheaply and quickly: Fibre to the Distribution point, a mini node that serves about 4 premises the owners of which which can choose to use the existing copper tail into their property or pay for fibre to be rolled out in their premises. Whatever, pulling fibre closer and closer to houses, businesses and government services must be one of the highest priorities! Build that economy UP!

Now, we have seen Netflix arrive here and since they have arrived here a lot of us have seen our copper internet stagger under the load. Netflix have done more than that—it has blown apart the ridiculous assumptions of Capt Turncoat’s much lauded (by Capt Turncoat who however didn’t wait for his crony to write but pre-empted its finding, almost as if he knew what that finding was going to be, oh, surely not? so–called Cost Benefit Analysis

Business Spectator wrote a great column about this, you will see an extract and link right here.

If you look at my Climate Change thread post of today you will see me comment on how the real NBN could have helped fight climate change by reducing road and air traffic by telepresence, telehealth and telecommuting.

This worst ever Australian government, this shambles in every day speak, just sets us back in every way on every day!

HBS Guy wrote:If you look at my Climate Change thread post of today you will see me comment on how the real NBN could have helped fight climate change by reducing road and air traffic by telepresence, telehealth and telecommuting.

This worst ever Australian government, this shambles in every day speak, just sets us back in every way on every day!

It would be a poor joke if it weren't for it's negative impacts. With them is approaches a real disaster for Australian business and communications across the board.An utter fiasco. I know because I have spent the good part of 18 months battling with my provider, and NBN, to get the service I had been paying for but not receiving.

I cannot tell you the waste of public monies involved in just MY ONE CASE.The government has crowed about the unexpected increase in employment. Well... I have to tell you IMHO it has got one hell of a lot to do with increased contracting to NBN, and call centre staff dealing with complaints. I had 6 different techs from NBN come to my property over this period. 6..all did the same job... none knew anything about what the other contractors had determined.!! So contractors were paid SIX different times, to SIX different outfits, for the SAME JOB. !! $240 per hour. Those attendances to my premise involved up to 50 hours on the ph to Telstra and NBN, and I spoke to more than 12 different operatives, all of whom wanted , and apparently needed to start from scratch EVRY FRIKKIN time. And I'm pretty sure they are located off-shore, despite what they say, because they all sound like people from the Phillipines or Malaysia to me. SO frustrating.. and it seems THEIR COMPUTERS ARE SO ineffective, and poorly linked, that they have a lot of trouble finding prior details.

EVENTUALLY........it was accepted that at 1.5 kms from the closed NBN Hub, I was 400 metres outside the zone of service, and should never have been signed up. THIS from the LAST NBN TECH, who was quite upfront about it. MIND YOU, they were all on a timeframe because I lodged a formal complaint, which has a finite period for resolution, after which compensation is payable.

So TELSTRA have credited my account with this, AND will supply a free $30 Boost per month package until such time as NBN is improved in my area.

I am thinking hard about the coming summer. Is going to be a hot one and the electricity generation/transmission will not be able to keep up. If we had ubiquitous FTTH and smart metres load sharing could be done in a sophiosticated way, But we don’t have FTTH so blackouts will happen.

I am going to buy a 2 panel solar system/car battery turned power pack/30L car fridge to keep food good, shade cloth along the north-facing back verandah to keep the house a bit cool.

I am thinking hard about the coming summer. Is going to be a hot one and the electricity generation/transmission will not be able to keep up. If we had ubiquitous FTTH and smart metres load sharing could be done in a sophiosticated way, But we don’t have FTTH so blackouts will happen.

I am going to buy a 2 panel solar system/car battery turned power pack/30L car fridge to keep food good, shade cloth along the north-facing back verandah to keep the house a bit cool.

HBS Guy wrote:I am thinking hard about the coming summer. Is going to be a hot one and the electricity generation/transmission will not be able to keep up. If we had ubiquitous FTTH and smart metres load sharing could be done in a sophiosticated way, But we don’t have FTTH so blackouts will happen.

I am going to buy a 2 panel solar system/car battery turned power pack/30L car fridge to keep food good, shade cloth along the north-facing back verandah to keep the house a bit cool.

Not my fave time that's for sure. I guess I could think about a stand alone set-up, say solar, altho in the past I've been thinking generator. On tank water..no power = no water. All I really need is power for the fridge and the water pump. But not necessarily at the same time. So.. fridge on till I need water, then switcheroo. The state government has recently spent humongous $ to duplicate power lines out this way. Ignoring long term organised opposition it went through anyway. To ensure supply. THERE BETTER NOT be any power outages here this summer.

Yeah thats why I pointed Aussie to Whirlpool I posed a query as to what speed I could expect and was surprised to find how lucky I am.Interestingly a guy who lives lives less than a kilometre from me posed a query the gist of the reply was sorry mate youre fucked

HBS Guy wrote:If you are going to be put on FTTN there is one sound bit of advice I can give, obtained from the people on Whirlpool who do this stuff for a living:

Look for a licensed cabler (aerial installers are usually licensed cablers.

Get him to come and rip out all your existing phone lines, phone points etc.

Then get him to run new, quality cable (cat 5 IIRC but check on that) from where the landline comes in to your residence to where you want the modem to go.

Too tight to do the above? Rip out all phone points bar the one you want to plug the modem into.

Clean new cable, one phone point do make a difference between miserable to acceptable copper internet.

No, not too tight. You told me about that before and I got a 'Cabler' in. Way too much cash for almost SFA gain. We will likely move to another place where the node is closer to House. That might be June 2018 when the next Tenant's Lease expires.

Shits me to tears. I'm happy with what I bloody well have!

(Me on Whirlpool! You might as well direct me to a Chinese political site.)